93 F. 274 | 9th Cir. | 1899
The appellee was the complainant in a bill in equity brought to restrain the appellants, the" Montana Ore-Purchasing Company and Augustus Heinze and Arthur P. .Heinze, from taking ores from certain mining properties. It was alleged in the bill that the complainant was the owner of the Pennsylvania lode claim, and that the defendants claimed the right to follow certain veins which had their apices in the claims lying northward of the complainant’s claim; that the defendants claimed or owned a por
On the former appeal of this case, it was held that the circuit court was without jurisdiction thereof, for the reason that no federal question was suggested by the allegations of the bill. Montana Ore-Purchasing Co. v. Boston & M. C. C. & S. Min. Co., 29 C. C. A. 462, 85 Fed. 867. The jurisdiction is now again challenged upon the same ground. When the case was remanded, the bill was amended, and new averments were inserted, for the purpose of showing that the case presents questions of the construction of statutes of the United States. The cause of suit remains unchanged. It is the question of the complainant’s right to enjoin the defendants from mining the ores beneath the surface of the complainant’s claim. The complainant asserts that right upon the ground that no vein having its apex in the defendants’ claim passes in its strike through the end lines thereof, so as to confer extralateral rights; and, further, that no such veiu is continuous or unbroken iu its downward course beneath the complainant’s claim. These are plain questions of fact:, involving, as we have heretofore decided, no construction of the laws of the United States. If the facts are as they are alleged to be in the bill, the inquiry will close with their proof, and the defendants will be enjoined. The new allegations of the amended bill are, in substance, that the defendants, as owners of the Karus lode claim, to which a patent has been issued, claim to own 1,318 linear feet of the Karus lode beneath the surface, although owning but 300 feet in length of the surface which covers that lode; that they claim extra-lateral rights upon the Karus lode to the full extent of 1,318 linear feet; that they claim the rigid, to follow the veins lying -within the lines of Ihfe original Karus location by virtue of the patent to the Johnstown lode claim, or by virtue of both the Johnstown and the Karus patents, and to follow the same beneath the complainant’s claim; that they contend that they cannot be enjoined from extracting ores from the complainant’s premises unless the complainant
Upon the authority of Tennessee v. Union & Planters’ Bank, 152 U. S. 454, 14 Sup. Ct. 654, the objection to the jurisdiction must he sustained. It is the distinct doctrine of the decision in that case that a court of the United States has no jurisdiction of a cause, upon the ground that a federal question is presented, unless the right of the plaintiff to the judgment or decree which he seeks depends directly upon the construction to he given to some provision of the constitution or a statute of the United States, and that, if in his hill or his declaration he asserts no right under such constitution or statutes, the jurisdiction cannot be sustained upon his allegation that the defendant will rely upon such rights. It was a case in’ which the state of Tennessee brought suit against a hank organized under the laws of that state to recover taxes which had been imposed on the bank by the general revenue act of the state. It. was alleged in the bill that the bank claimed immunity from taxation solely upon the ground that the act imposing tbe tax was void, as violative of the provision of the constitution of the United States which prohibits a state from passing a law impairing the obligation of a contract. The court said:
“Tbe only reference to the constitution or laws of the United States is the suggestion that the defendants will contend that the law of the state under which the plaintiffs claim is void, because in contravention of the constitution of the United States; and by the settled law of this court, as appears from, the decisions above cited, a suggestion of one party that the other will or may set up a claim under the constitution or laws of the United States does not make the suit one arising under that constitution or those laws.”
We are unable to distinguish tbe principle which was decided in that case from the question which is involved in this. In that case it was alleged in the plaintiff’s statement of its own case that its right to the relief sought was contested by the defendant under a claim of protection from the constitution of the United States. In the present case it is alleged- that the relief which the plaintiff seeks will be opposed by the defendant upon the ground of the protection-afforded. it by a patent the construction of which involves the application of-statutes of the United States. In City of Fergus Falls v. Fergus Falls Water Co., 19 C. C. A. 212, 72 Fed. 873, the circuit court
“The averments of the complaint, beyond those which state a cause of action upon the contract in suit, arc mere surplusage. When the statement of the plaintiff's cause of action in legal and logical form, such as is required by the rules of good pleading, does not disclose that the suit is one arising under the constitution or laws of the United States, then the suit is not one arising under that constitution or those laws, and the circuit court has no jurisdiction.”
In that case it was alleged in the complaint as the ground of the jurisdiction that the defendant, a municipal corporation, by a resolution of its council, had declared null and void the contract which was sued upon, thereby impairing the obligation of the contract.
Not only are the jurisdictional averments of the amended bill insufficient to show that federal questions are involved, but all those averments were put in issue by the defendants’ answer, and were thereby eliminated from the controversy. The defendant corporation denied that it relied upon any of the contentions which the bill so averred it would rely upon. In Robinson v. Anderson, 121 U. S. 522, 7 Sup. Ct. 1011, the court said:
“Even if the complaint, standing by itself, made out a case of jurisdiction,— which we do not decide, — it was taken away as soon as the answers were in; because, if there was jurisdiction at all, it was by reason of the averments in the complaint as to what the defenses against the title of the plaintiff's would be, and these were of no avail, as soon as the answers were filed and it was made to appear that no snch defenses were relied upon.”
It is objected that the denials of the answer do not fully and explicitly traverse the new averments of the amended bill, but that they are denials only that the defendant relies in “this action” upon the alleged rights and claims, and that the defendant disclaims only for the purpose of this present suit, without waiving its right to assert such claims in some other suit or proceeding hereafter. Xo exception, however, was taken to the answer for insufficiency. It was accepted as responding to the allegations of the amended bill. We think it was properly so accepted. If, in view of some possible other action affecting other interests, the defendant has attempted to reserve the privilege to assert other rights under the Rarus patent, it is immaterial to the present controversy. It is only to the rights asserted by the complainant in this suit that the defendant must make answer. It is required to make its defense to the allegations of the bill, and to show cause why the relief prayed for should not he decreed. It has answered as to its rights to extract the ores in question. It says that it claims nothing by virtue of the Rarus patent, but that it relies solely upon the fact that the ores it has taken belong to a vein which has its apex in the Johnstown lode claim, and in its strike passes through the end lines of said claim, and in its downward course extends beneath the surface of the complainant’s claim. Upon such a bill and such an answer, all questions concerning the right of the defendant to mine the ores in controversy are determinable, and the decree, if against the defendant, would be as effective to bar it from hereafter asserting rights under the Rarus patent as would be a decree upon any other form of answer.